Polly Oliver's Problem eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 153 pages of information about Polly Oliver's Problem.

Polly Oliver's Problem eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 153 pages of information about Polly Oliver's Problem.

“No near ones, and none that she has ever seen.  Still, she is not absolutely alone, as many girls would be under like circumstances.  We would be only too glad to have her here; the Howards have telegraphed asking her to spend the winter with them in Cambridge; I am confident Dr. Winship will do the same when the news of Mrs. Oliver’s death reaches Europe; and Mrs. Bird seems to have constituted herself a sort of fairy Godmother in chief.  You see everybody loves Polly; and she will probably have no less than four homes open to her.  The fact is, if you should put Polly on a desert island, the bees and the butterflies and the birds would gather about her; she draws everything and everybody to her magically.  Then, too, she is not penniless.  Rents are low, and she cannot hope to get quite as much for the house as before, but even counting repairs, taxes, and furnishings, we think she is reasonably certain of fifty dollars a month.”

“She will never be idle, unless this sorrow makes a great change in her.  Polly seems to have been created to ‘become’ by ‘doing.’”

“Yet she does not in the least relish work, Edgar.  I never knew a girl with a greater appetite for luxury.  One cannot always see the deepest reasons in God’s providence as applied to one’s own life and character; but it is often easy to understand them as one looks at other people and notes their growth and development.  For instance, Polly’s intense love for her invalid mother has kept her from being selfish.  The straitened circumstances in which she has been compelled to live have prevented her from yielding to self-indulgence or frivolity.  Even her hunger for the beautiful has been a discipline; for since beautiful things were never given to her ready-made, she has been forced to create them.  Her lot in life, which she has always lamented, has given her a self-control, a courage, a power, which she never would have had in the world had she grown up in luxury.  She is too young to see it, but it is very clear to me that Polly Oliver is a glorious product of circumstances.”

“But,” objected Edgar, “that is not fair.  You are giving all the credit to circumstances, and none to Polly’s own nature.”

“Not at all.  If there had not been the native force to develop, experience would have had nothing to work upon.  As it is, her lovely childish possibilities have become probabilities, and I look to see the girlish probabilities blossom into womanly certainties.”

Meanwhile Polly, it must be confessed, was not at the present time quite justifying the good opinion of her friends.

She had few of the passive virtues.  She could bear sharp stabs of misfortune, which fired her energy and pride, but she resented pin pricks.  She could carry heavy, splendid burdens cheerfully, but she fretted under humble cares.  She could serve by daring, but not by waiting.  She would have gone to the stake or the scaffold, I think, with tolerable grace; but she would probably have recanted any article of faith if she had been confronted with life-imprisonment.

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Polly Oliver's Problem from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.